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tv   [untitled]    December 8, 2012 2:00am-2:30am EST

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beaver's leadership apparently believes to the pressure from the tone of the sounds of the demonstrators who converged on the doorstep of the presidential palace in cairo would be all of its deadly size to allow the protests. that sound to enter down be used ohm's in fargo against syria saying it wants to pump more military hardware into the mix or a. sign on a new arab spring burner should be a ripening in the gulf numerous opposition groups unite in a way to bring their movement to mrs iron fist a response and adding more internal street protests. and the british royal couple's drive expecting their first babies and all the medicine this side following a great deal prank called in on good public trying to get down into its.
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international news and comment live from moscow this is all she with me thanks for joining us and the tough stand between egypt's leader mohamed morsi under thousand strong opponents it looks like the president could throw in the towel first most his aides claim there's a high chance one of the key opposition demands will be met that's being delayed on approaching a referendum on a controversial islamic led constitution cairo based reporter was at the presidential palace where schools pressure tested of an age. as you can probably see behind me there are hundreds of thousands of protesters who met in the middle because there's a barricades on either side of the streets the carney chanting against the muslim brotherhood the president in the constitution how this happened we're not entirely
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sure. protest is i've spoken to said that to essentially the republican guards just stepped aside and let people cost i first of all worried that this might be a sign of some kind of trap or actually other people were saying that maybe they just felt that the hundreds of thousands of people because it has now stretched to hundreds of thousands of people just overwhelm the guards and they just lose it will be safe to let people free by the moment you can see for a test is stretching into the horizon guys they chance against president morsi in a mild to stay here all night so i know the scenes are quite juvenile and so we haven't hired to have any violence yes it seems that they mean at the moment under force of the republican guards who erected these barricades on thursday increasing this curfew after violent clashes there actually standing on top of tanks with protesters threw a chance in the protests the chanting against the mostly they don't appear to be doing anything about the crowds we have an absence here of all pro president supports his mission which actually helps in terms of violence as most of the
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clashes have been between rival protest groups meeting and then the scene times violence one recent development we had is the justice minister came out and said that the president might consider delaying the referendum if opposition forces agree to dialogue to engage in dialogue without preconditions was entirely sure what this statement means but it is a sign that perhaps the president is mulling over have potential talks with opposition forces and others not to course the president says in his day in his speech to the nation last night that he will hold talks with opposition leaders on saturday which is tomorrow to talk about the problems that they have with the constitution and the constitution that gratian which many seems to have said is a massive power. ground by the president's reaction might be coalition of opposition forces the national salvation front was an absolute no sir really we're still in a deadlock. and in one of egypt's largest industrial seems to have. a government
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that has since had revolted taken over the local council but mainly independents and to mourn the revolution is going to be a second when an egypt is lined up by some sort of. law made morsi is heading down the same wrong road as his predecessor believes holder also among those the president told they are but middle east and journalists association . lots of feelings against the muslim brotherhood by a lot of egyptians especially because of the role they played right after the revolution a lot of people saw that they were close to the army and the army was responsible for a lot of the problems that we were seeing but i think that they're seeing another dictator in the making they're seeing another mubarak and morsi is really making the same mistakes that mubarak. during the january twenty fifth revolution we're seeing him being too slow to react to people's demands it's a fast moving situation yet he is very slow to react and respond his this speech
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instead of calling people down he actually enraged the people more when protesters went down to the streets the main demand was clear that the main demand was to cancel this constitution of the creation but today if you see the footage out of egypt you're hearing them asking morsi to quit asking him to leave just like they've asked mubarak. to us just as an approaching the fiscal cliff. do you know if it's good. do you think a lot of americans do not even most the word i think they are and i think that if i ignore it all go away but nothing's really going to change because the economy is like that you might begin to dream. about. some of the rest and also if americans are prepared to die that's ahead. also later this hour declares full scale war on a deadly rosena virus disease which kills hundreds of thousands of children in the world yet promising one donor vaccine against the people. looking
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to unite its own hands version now wants to take the use of arms embargo against syria london says it will still hope rebel groups small via greeter shipments of military gear. first reports final recipients may not be the ones the u.k. doesn't mind. the u.k. foreign office has confirmed this week britain's. going to be thinking an amendment to the arms embargo on syria making it easier to help the opponents the syrian president bashar al assad now a foreign office official has said that the practical support is likely to include training and non-lethal equipment britain want to play a role in syria after the regime falls because. they would like to be involved. so therefore. wants to back the winning side. never will provide. the trouble for. the counter i
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did far eventually. should you support. what will be the interests of the militias. here when they take power because the danger is there is new. leader of the opposition because of the twenty therefore if bashar al assad leaves power. in syria the. part. in fact fight one another at the end of the day is going to be the syrian who are going to decide not britain france the united states now currently items such as body armor and night vision goggles of course up in that arms embargo and say the amendment would allow items like that to piece the ploy of course throughout the conflict in syria we see in an increasingly fragmented opposition and say there is a lot of concern that the supply of any weaponry could well end up in the wrong
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hands numb the last person will be pushing ahead this week thinking that amendment . a number of syrian rebels have created a new unified military command to better coordinate the insurgency in syria but so far it's only caused even more division a spokesman for the free syrian army which was in attendance denounced the new authority as saturated by islamists and by once controlled from outside syria meanwhile the nothingness is mobilizing to patriot missile batteries to sense to take a journey german and american they are to guard against a possible attack from syria one that lawrence wilkerson the former chief of staff to secretary of state colin powell says will never come. why in the world would we put patriot batteries on the turkish border ostensibly to protect turkey with the largest army and the most powerful army in the region indeed one of the most powerful in the world turkey major no protection by us from that sort of thing and it would be utterly. utterly stupid for assad to attack turkey in that way so why
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are we doing these things that look like they aren't connected to reality unless reality is we're preparing the ground to intervene in syria i think also that it would be again a back door as a war into iran which is the as you well know the real threat that we've been putting out there for years now and i think we're looking at syria and iran being a combination that we would then take on and you're talking about in my view a conflict that becomes regional and maybe even wider. one of the oldest standing gulf monarchies could soon face a new arab spring style uprising kuwait's rule is cracking down on protesters and blocking the opposition's political moves but all of this is an uprising the resistance even more. reports. tensions are simmering beneath the do seeking political change to meet.
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the into power. of the. it's been ruled by the same family for more than two centuries kuwait is widely seen as the most him aquatic of the gulf monarchies get some young kuwaitis beg to differ there is a few countries. do you want to see it go from this in this town to the people but . it's just. the government says that it is doing all it can to maintain stability supporters of the ruling family point out that it boasts a robust public life with electoral traditions and a vibrant parliament for youth activist rashid off the dollar that's not enough the opposition consists of an unlikely alliance of youth groups hard line islamists and local tribes who are ramping up their calls for reform increasingly they've taken their message to the street where peaceful demonstrations have been met with an iron fist that we were beaten up by. the special forces to. the sound.
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but on and after the march whoever is on the street is it just being the thing that one of the very critics of kuwait's government claim it turns a blind eye to allegations of widespread corruption and the use of security forces to crush dissenting voices ask for the rule of law so we don't have a law we have a law that is being used whenever the government feels like using the rig's here began years before the arab spring protests but have intensified over a series of political crises the opposition dominated parliament was dismissed earlier this year following a row with the ruling establishment the electoral law was then changed prompting many to boycott kuwait's most recent parliamentary vote the resulting divide is unlikely to be bridged anytime soon and it leaves the monarchy with an energized opposition eager to make itself heard was really more cause there was our what people are trying to hide by taking the streets that
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they are was there to help the system they want reality was. this one show but that isn't. the. last thing in the future that future please don't write the next chapter of the arab spring you seek out. some nice. cold for you those and all of the rest to bring against the decades and centuries old monikers in the gulf states and you can have that fall by ground in fire analysis and timelines and of course no news of her very father greg. invented by the famed soviet orthopedic is good for you is there and the nine hundred fifty s. these frames were initially used to treat fractures in deformities by cutting bones and slowly pulling them up or therefore stimulating tissue regeneration elizabeth
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was able to reshape arms and legs and people who thought they were crippled for life about a third of patients admitted to be always out of center nowadays seeking series three focus medical reasons most of them a man and most are not what you would call vertically challenged professor novick of who operated on many of them says it usually comes down to a man's pride first patient to turn to us with a leg length in the request to meet his fifteen centimeters to the want to surgery because panos tool than him we like to say that we need to break their legs in order to fix their head like lengthening surgeries a band in many countries and even the will out there pretty expensive in russia the entire course costs eleven thousand dollars about one tenth of the similar package in the united states financial considerations for one of the reasons that brought this washington state native to western siberia his main motive for the surgery had
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to do with how he fared in the others in america average height is one seventy five i was one sixty seven or one sixty eight and so eight centimeters would have brought me right to average for women height isn't so important girl can be sure it's not a big deal like your guy is like expected to be taller just before the operation most this matter a russian girl who found he's a regional hide quite endearing yet he still want to have had the surgery adding seven more centimeters to he self-confidence she told me the whole time you're crazy you're normal you're perfect. so now if their color you're so tall what a compliment for somebody who's used to falling short of his own expectations.
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more news today is once again flared up. these are the images the world has been seeing from the streets of canada. the giant corporations are old today. it's technology innovation all these developments around russia we've got the future covered.
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and this is also you welcome by the nose who treats as the u.k. zero mother to be kate middleton for acute morning sickness committed suicide following a prank call from an australian radio station to do trades called the private london hospital impersonating the queen and prince charles to gain information on the duchess's condition also use point blank of find out whether the media should learn or responsibility means. you'd have to be living under a rock not to have heard all about kate's pregnancy that was announced this week and the fact that the duchess of cambridge was in hospital and really you know any mainstream media website you can play corner and see all the details in fact the media speculation surrounding this pregnancy has been has really reached fever pitch we've had discussions over whether or not the duchess could be expecting twins whether it would be in line for the throne if in fact it is twins whether if
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she has a natural birth the first is says area in section where there would be the physicians that decides who is the successor to the throne all this is taking place when there are other events taking place in the world still a crisis in syria protests in egypt it's all taking place against this backdrop and a lot of people saying that this media coverage of kate's pregnancy has really been rather disproportionate especially with this tragic. it has now ensued now i'm joined by a along certain journalist he's been following the story of course now a lot of people saying that they're sick of hearing about kate's morning sickness now the british media has a lot of people saying overlooking much more pressing issues why is the you so obsessed with royal and celebrity culture. because it's paper because it gives diverts you know divert attention away from the issue of corporate control you increase privatization of services you know the benefit cuts increase division in
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this country you think this tragic twist is going to fuel the call of those that say that the morning to should be abolished altogether what i don't think we should necessarily use. as an opportunity for political point scoring but of course if we had a media which was more reasonable just when that happened if the two sides actually proved to be related to what happened i personally think there should never will from any but that's another question. but there you have it now the jews and duchess of cambridge have said that deeply saddened by the news of the tragic news of this the death of the royal not so what should have been a joy for the pregnancy announcement has been saved because of the disproportionate media coverage chimed in to a very tragic news story nonetheless now track what else is happening around the world hamas chief. has visited gaza for the first time bursting into tears and
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calling the trip his servant birth to give a speech during the summer break the parties twentieth anniversary spark speculation of what the group considered by many as a terrorist is getting acceptance in the modern world it also comes after hamas invited its political rival fatah to the festival which could mean a warming in relations between the party. overall car bomber has asked congress to approve a sixty billion dollars aid package for the states worst hit by superstorm. the request has to get approval from the republicans and democrats the president's team has also proposed to write the package to any spending cuts due to its urgent and a one time. so ago most people recovery funs come as they say so with the republicans to have voiced a so-called fiscal cliff and it's a set of spending rises on tax cuts that are set to take effect on the first of january and could be ruinous to the economy but does the average american see the looming to. try to find out.
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america is about to go over the fiscal cliff are you worried what should we do about it this week let's talk about that do you know if it's good. do you think a lot of americans do so then why is the media talking about it incessantly we're also going to do i guess i have not as informed as i should be but i just kind of figure it might work out do you think most people feel that way you know you think most people are worried i think they are and i think that if i ignored it all go away do you think calling it something like the fiscal cliff minimizes that yes or no i definitely agree that it's a complex problem i don't think it simplifies it though i think it adds an element of panic or fear looming. doom and the media loves that do you think there's actually something to worry about or do you think it's something the politicians in the media used to distract us from what's really going on politics and media for
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sure so what's really going on that they're distracting us from. their own personal agendas if they're not really trying to work together there are three business channels we're in twenty four hours a day and it's good news nothing else is happening we're already caught in one so we move on and we just talk about the fiscal cliff correct i always carry body everybody in their system even though nothing's really going to change because the economy's like that he might all i think it will change i just don't think they're going to. think about it whether or not americans are worried about the fiscal cliff the bottom line is the media is milking the crowd out of the phrase while realistically nothing drastic is probably going to happen. in days on its way to making what it sees as being one of the biggest leaps in medicine in modern times it's developing a one dollar of a scene for a baby killer disease which would help prevent many thousands of deaths she was
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pressuring the hospital. this is india's genome valley inside these quiet sterile labs there's a revolution taking place that could change the world's approach to public health and potentially save the lives of one hundred thousand indian children every year biotech is an indian firm developing a one dollar vaccine against rotavirus a disease which causes diarrhea in and is deadly in the developing world i think also like a new generation and most like us ok money making is also important but them solving the life saving those life or two hundred thousand child is also what critical a new study shows india is leading the way in treating people in remote areas in battling diseases which are shunned by the big pharmaceutical companies because immunizations in the developed world have all but obliterated them they will not be focusing because that's what our shareholders are going to demand but there was a value in research for one billion dollars on a product i mean to five billion dollars says india's leap into innovating for the
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under-served began when the country began complying with the global intellectual property law it forced them to stop making only cheap copies of existing drugs and branch out instead into new research and development creating vaccines isn't the only way to battle neglected diseases diagnostic tests are also key to identifying what the problem is this fabric chip is being developed here in a chair allowed in bangalore the idea is with just one drop of blood on the spot form you could diagnose at home or in a doctor's office potentially reaching millions of people in this country who don't have access to proper health care dr done jiah done the koori the brains behind the fabric chip believes that other more profit driven companies will start to take an interest once they realize just how big this market really is a volume going to play just like sort of ones there's like millions of millions of this being sold no matter how cheap the trying is and people who get interested in maybe the price point of a lot of mind to do it in their will. what it's all going on but it starts making
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sense taking matters into their own hands to save the lives of their country's people and not waiting for the big profit driven pharmaceutical companies to make the first play preassure either r.t. bangalore india that's coming up and again that's is the latest edition of the kinds of recalled.
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six zero in the gulf coldness because. no no no no because it was going to logan's experience before serious with the cargo. model to fall short of. so much forced to ship. before college and. they are all here to make it possible. to chimp and the client on our show.
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soon which brightened a few. songs from feinstein crashing. through stunts on t.v. don't come. hello
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imax times or whether the kaiser report hollywood money is it money it's been jailed snow melts in your hand and there you are this or that dorothy parker said that nine hundred fifty six but she could have well been talking about twenty
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twelve and the global financial system where money and wealth melt like so much congealed snow stacey. i mean that was a great introduction just reading the both of dorothy parker i think she had a cat named cliche. well the news is a cliche this week and i want to look at this hollywood accounting and it is something that hollywood has taught the world michigan town moves hollywood but ends up with a bit part so the story starts in august two thousand and seven jennifer granholm is the governor of michigan into michigan flies mike binder who is a director from michigan and he convinces the governor that hey michigan should have one of these financial incentive schemes that all the other states have which is basically not only giving also as a tax breaks like property tax to studios but actually giving them money to bring
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their productions to your state so michigan introduced this scheme and within two months twenty four movies had signed up to film in michigan from to the entire year before the productions estimated that they would spend one hundred ninety five million dollars filming there and in return they would be refunded about seventy million in cash yeah i mean this is important because before enron before world com before collateralized debt obligation before the shadow banking system before goldman's. x. slush fund before jamie dime to became ruler of the underworld of financial terrorism there was something called the only one accounting where very simply there are no net profits but net profits are what are promised like art buchwald from coming to america the movie made hundreds of millions but he never got a nickel because there was never any net profits that was the hollywood accounting that was made famous by the schmucks in the charlatans and harley.

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